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Development ethics and evolving methods: a comparison of fair trade with the Millennium Villages Project

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The motivations for rural and agricultural development in the twenty-first century are not different from previous centuries, but evolving technologies in the late twentieth century have altered many methods and institutional arrangements for accomplishing development. The internet has facilitated initiatives that in earlier decades would have required large, complex organizations in both donor and developing countries. We will compare the ethical and institutional strengths and weaknesses of two such initiatives in Malawi: a smallholder farmers organization involved in fair trade and the Millennium Village Project. These are two of a large array of institutions which are currently being used to benefit smallholder agricultural producers. We will examine their relative merits through the lenses of various ethical paradigms and show that the institutional arrangements of the two programs are complimentary in the evolution of agricultural trading systems linking the global north and south.

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/17449626.2014.895407
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    Publication year

    2014

    Authors

    Beedy T L; Esquith S L

    Language

    English

    Keywords

    empowerment, smallholder, food security, groundnut, smallholders

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